UBC-based author of:
Ucieczka do zycia. (Escape to life.) Lublin, Jotolusa Trade and Management, 2001.
[UBC 2004]
Ucieczka do zycia. (Escape to life.) Lublin, Jotolusa Trade and Management, 2001.
[UBC 2004]
Articles: 2 Articles for this author
Escape to Life (Jotolusa $19.95, 604-224-6366)
Info
In Jan Solecki's first novel, Escape to Life (Jotolusa $19.95, 604-224-6366), Canadian orphans Ko-lai and Ta-li help patriotic guerillas liberate 1,000 Chinese prisoners from a Japanese death camp in the 1930s.
"The crippled and amputees came next. Those who had heavy casts were placed on carts; others walked, some holding onto carts. In spite of their miserable plight, a few appeared cheerful. Then came the smallest group, the plague-infected men who had suffered heavy losses from sickness and from being machine-gunned by their doctors.";
Born in Inner Mongolia, Solecki makes clear on the book jacket that, in fact, no one ever escaped from the hideous camps where captives were guinea pigs for experiments for biological warfare.
Solecki served in the British forces as a gunner and was held as a POW in Shamshuipo camp. After graduating from the London School of Economics, he immigrated to Vancouver in 1959. From 1964 to 1984 he taught at UBC, specializing in the economies of Russia and China. Of Polish-Russian descent, he speaks Polish and Russian and has knowledge of three other languages. He lives in North Vancouver.
[BCBW SUMMER 1999]
Escape to Life (Jotolusa $19.95)
Article
Jan Solecki was born in Inner Mongolia in 1919. In WW II he served in British forces as a gunner and was held as a POW in the Shamshuipo camp by the Japanese. After graduating from the London School of Economics, Solecki immigrated to Vancouver in 1959. From 1964 to 1984 he taught at UBC, specializing in the economies of Russia and China. Solecki speaks Polish and Russian and has a working knowledge of three other languages. Of Polish-Russian descent, he lives in North Vancouver.
In his historical novel Escape to Life (Jotolusa $19.95) Canadian orphans Ko-lai and Ta-li help patriotic guerrillas liberate 1,000 Chinese prisoners from a Japanese-run death camp in the 1930s. Solecki makes clear on the book jacket that no one ever escaped from the hideous POW camps where captives were guinea pigs for experiments for biological warfare. "The crippled and amputees came next. Those who had heavy casts were placed on carts; others walked, some holding onto carts. In spite of their miserable plight, a few appeared cheerful. Then came the smallest group, the plague-infected men who had suffered heavy losses from sickness and from being machine-gunned by their doctors."; 0-9684465-0-7
[BCBW AUTUMN 1999]